• This forum is strictly intended to be used by members of the VS Battles wiki. Please only register if you have an autoconfirmed account there, as otherwise your registration will be rejected. If you have already registered once, do not do so again, and contact Antvasima if you encounter any problems.

    For instructions regarding the exact procedure to sign up to this forum, please click here.
  • We need Patreon donations for this forum to have all of its running costs financially secured.

    Community members who help us out will receive badges that give them several different benefits, including the removal of all advertisements in this forum, but donations from non-members are also extremely appreciated.

    Please click here for further information, or here to directly visit our Patreon donations page.
  • Please click here for information about a large petition to help children in need.

Are overpowered main protagonists in books bad writing?

Entirely depends on what you are writing and how.
 
It depends on how they're used and their antagonist.

At times, it quite literally boils down to tone or type of antagonist (Nature, man, self, society, etc)
 
I love medaka box.

And medaka is as overpwered as a protagonist can be. lol
 
Depends on the context, the feel of the show and it's nature.

Tatsuya Shiba is an incredibly bland character because within the nature of the show which is trying to be dramatic with lots of action, he's so perfect at everything we know how it goes and it's boring, he never grows, he never shows his flaws, nothing, and he has no humour to back himself up.

Now as for Saitama, he's a comic relief character within the show and seeing his conflict from his overpoweredness gullets his character, and makes him interesting.
 
No, I actually enjoy stories with OP main characters.If done right theyre amazing, if not its just going to become a power fantasy

My favorites are Lucifer and Sandman.
 
Luke Skywalker is ridiculously OP in Legends. Still a much better character than either Disney Luke or Rey will ever be, both of who are extremely weak by comparison..
 
Matthew Schroeder said:
Luke Skywalker is ridiculously OP in Legends. Still a much better character than either Disney Luke or Rey will ever be, both of who are extremely weak by comparison..
Legends Luke better then Canon Luke

Reasons plz
 
Depend on execution. Like said earlier, even tier 0 could actually be an interesting character, if you actually spend time characterize them. Neglecting that, and you end up with a character who doesn't shown anything for it yet is still called great anyway, or a Mary Sue.
 
Saitama and Dr. Manhattan are great examples of making a ridiculously overpowered character in a story work.

I also like stories where the main character is a super overpowered badass, but there are even stronger bad guys out there that give the MC a difficult time.
 
The short answer is it depends.

The long answer is that it all depends on how you handle it and the conflict (as others have said above).

For my example, I'm going to use a character I used to read a lot of as a kid, Daniel X by James Patterson. Daniel is a Reality Warping, shapeshifting, matter manipulating teenager with enough super strength to punch through brick walls and enough speed to catch up to speeding cars with ease. His first adventure he is legitimately threatened by someone who is aware of all of his powers and gets around them by manipulating him and subsequently incapacitating him with a timed bomb.

In subsequent adventures, he gains the ability to travel through time (and thus redo nearly anything he got wrong the first time) and later pushes the limits of his Reality Warping to the point that he could imagine others dead. The it's revealed that he could have revived his long-dead friends and family anytime he wanted, and you suddenly start wondering why all the conflict of the story happens in the first place.

This is a clumsily handled OP protagonist.

On the other hand, you have other OP protagonists like the Hero (he's literally just named Hero) of Maoyuu Maou Yuusha: "Kono Watashi no Mono Tonare, Yuusha yo" "Kotowaru!" (The Hero and His Archenemy the Demon Lord: "Be mine, Hero!" "I refuse!")

Being the chosen hero of the entire series, he boasts overwhelming power that would allow him to defeat literally anyone in the story in a straight up fight, with the talent, charm, and companions to make it work.

On the other hand, his overwhelming niceness leads him to push his friends away since he doesn't want them to get hurt, unintentionally hurting their feelings in the process.

The it's revealed that the current Demon Lord isn't actually evil, but instead wants to preserve the balance of power between the Human and Demon Worlds and promote the economy and technological advancement in both worlds to increase the standard of living.

Having lived and trained for nothing but beating the Demon Lord, the Hero is basically useless for doing much other than physical labor now that he's been deprived of his role of "killing everything that seems to be evil" and laments that he's never really gotten a proper education.

This is a well-handled OP protagonist. He's super-powerful, but not in the circumstances needed in the story. He's super-nice, but it also works against him. He's likable, but clearly flawed. In the end, technological advancement also deprives him of his nigh-invincibility in combat, further adding to the stakes of the story.
 
Back
Top